Tension In Odiguetue community : Louis Odion Sends Edo Governor, Gabriel Obaseki an Emotional Appeal
Obaseki help!, my community besieged
As
the second week of Lent opened last week, the mostly Catholic folks of
Odiguetue community could not have envisaged murder and mayhem while in a
solemn pursuit of the state of grace riding the steed of faith.
But how mistaken they were; the ecumenical sobriety invoked by days of dedicated fasting would
be shattered by the weekend. It was the turn of Odiguetue, my ancestral
home in Ovia North East in Edo State, to be visited with murder and
terror by genocidal Fulani herders.
Throughout
the weekend, my phone rang almost continuously as I was inundated with
calls from relations and other folks in extreme anger and grief.
Like
most Edo communities customarily hospitable to all ethnic
nationalities, Odiguetue had for ages been home to a considerable
population of Igbira farmers. Things however took a sour turn last month
when, in an unprovoked attack, these Igbira folks were reportedly
sacked from their farms by AK-47-wielding herders and their yam tubers
fed to the cows.
On Friday, a farm labourer (said to be Benue indigene) was shot at while on his way from the farm.
On Saturday,
two other community members (one William Okpoko and an unnamed Igbo
man) barely escaped death while tending their farms as the
AK-47-wielding assailants opened fire, just to make way for their herd
to graze.
In fright and then in flight, one of the victims expectedly left his weather-beaten motorcycle behind.
For
the bullets thus “wasted”, the invaders grew madder. So mindless, they
would not just stop at allowing their cattle plunder the farms; that
bike was vandalized, even in its condition of decrepitude.
The
following day, the reign of terror was, in fact, escalated. The herders
literally went berserk, shooting indiscriminately from one farm to the
other. Caught unawares, not a few sustained gunshot wounds. This time,
another community member (said to be of Igbira stock) was not so lucky
as he was felled in cold blood by a bullet.
I confirmed this with multiple credible sources.
These
atrocities, I am ashamed to admit, have actually been going on for
long, largely under-reported, simply because the victims are poor folks.
Forgotten by government, the only asset they own is the land, often
inherited. The only skill they possess is farming. Now, the opportunity
to even parlay that to eke out a living is being denied them.
Meanwhile, as the news of the bloodshed spread by weekend
and the now restive youths - ordinarily doughty descendants of ancient
warriors who with bare hands had confronted British invaders in the 19th
century - began to regroup in the communal square, a police team from
Ekiadolor Division stormed the community and, predictably, counseled
against reprisal, urging the people to approach the police headquarters in Benin City instead and formally lodge a complaint.
Now,
the curious angle: while profusely urging the wounded and the
traumatized to exercise more equanimity, the custodians of legitimate
firearms otherwise licensed to kill in the pursuit of crime or the
defense of justice failed to say the words that would have made more
meaning to the disaffected in the circumstance: a resolve to lead the
youths and other volunteers into the bush right away to, at least,
disarm - if not dislodge - the murderous herders who, besides heaping
such gratuitous social insult on the community, have now virtually
turned the farmlands to a no-go-area for the locals, thus undermining the people’s economic survival.
Human endurance or patience is certainly tested when the victims are made to bear the additional burden of having to exercise restraint in the face of extreme provocation.
Sadly, Odiguetue is not isolated. These tales of woe are replicated virtually across the length and breath of Edo State today.
Across the land, the body count is mounting. In recent times, no fewer than sixty people have been reportedly killed
in such gruesome circumstances. In Ojah community in Edo North, for
instance, Jerome Obayemi lost an arm while fending off a herder’s
machete blow meant to behead him on the way to the farm.
Elsewhere
in Ewu community in Edo Central, two elderly women, Christiana Ikheloa
and Fatima Emoyon, were butchered by suspected herdsmen. In neighboring
Ekpoma town, Margaret Odiamehi, a grandmother, was allegedly raped and
killed while working on her farm.
At a personal level, this writer has had cause in the past to lament his own ordeal on this space.
Once, we woke up one morning to find that the forecourt of my private
residence in Benin City had been vandalized by cattle stomping past.
Such is the sort of monstrosity we are being conditioned to accept as
the new normal - cows willfully violating the sanctity of human
dwelling.
Responding
to the growing siege, the Godwin Obaseki administration, apart from
hosting a stakeholders summit, recently rolled out a slew of
counter-measures, the highlight of which is the ban on overnight
grazing. But as the Odiguetue killings in broad daylight last weekend
have undoubtedly proved, such policy would no longer seem adequate.
Already,
the revered Benin monarch, Oba Ewuare II, has expressed worry over this
clear and present threat. From reports, he has taken proactive steps by
rousing the traditional sentinels to be on guard.
What
remains is to infuse the political space with equal sense of urgency.
The peace and security of the society, let it be stressed, is a shared
commitment. Much as political values may differ, the challenge of the
moment calls for a bi-partisan response by the political elite of both
APC and PDP in Edo.
A
bill sent by PDP to the State of Assembly recently seeking a more
stringent rule of engagement for the herders ought not be dismissed in
entirety ab initio on account of its provenance as I read some easily excitable APC stalwarts have been doing.
It
will be imprudent of Edo Government to keep lobotomizing itself with a
cocktail of “soft” regulations in the hour of great peril when vigilant
neighbours are adopting tough stance. That will only render the
acclaimed “cradle of black civilization” the new preferred destination
of these savages. Whose interest is thus served?
Really,
only those who have had to endure the torture and trauma inflicted by
the herders over the time are perhaps better placed to attest that the
devil rarely ascertains APC or PDP birthmark before wreaking havoc.
When
not sacking farmlands, it is now common knowledge that some of these
killer herders convert their “down time” into either kidnap-for-ransom
or bloody armed robberies along either the Benin-Okada expressway or the
Benin-Agbanikaka axis or the Benin-Auchi corridor.
So,
if anyone ought to be incensed at this development and therefore
impatient to cut the leash, it should be Obaseki, known to be champion
of free enterprise. And for three critical reasons. With Edo’s still
weak industrial base, there is no denying that farming remains the
largest employer of our people.
Two, mechanized agriculture is at the heart of the 200,000 jobs Obaseki promised to create in four years.
With people now afraid to go to farm on account of AK-47-wielding
herders lurking in the wild, we should know that existing agrarian jobs
are being lost instead, with grave threat to food security as well.
Three, Obaseki’s commendable offer to engage repatriates from Libya is empowering them to seize opportunities in the agriculture sector.
Now,
it will be doubly tragic if, after being enslaved and dehumanized in
the accursed North African hell-hole, the unfortunate youths who choose
to enroll at the new farming camps end up being used as target practice
by these lunatics masquerading as cattle-rearers.
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